Christopher MarciszIn Russia’s Village of the MouseDon’t call it a tourist trap — the Volga River town of Myshkin has made the most of little more than a silly nameAug 26, 2018Aug 26, 2018
Christopher MarciszArt after the Internet at ICA BostonThe internet is no longer about unnamed technological hopes and terrors. We live in it, and art is finally catching upMay 17, 2018May 17, 2018
Christopher MarciszA few bright spots from 2017Here’s a few things I’ll remember fondly from this otherwise largely crap yearDec 28, 2017Dec 28, 2017
Christopher Marcisz‘We are all a little bit of horse ourselves’On its 100th anniversary, no one wants to think too hard about the October Revolution, or why it still mattersNov 8, 2017Nov 8, 2017
Christopher MarciszKen Burns’ Vietnam War, and OursSometimes war really is about right and wrongNov 6, 2017Nov 6, 2017
Christopher MarciszMoscow’s permanent renovationUlitsa Varvarka is one of the most interesting streets in Russia’s capital, just watch your stepSep 21, 2017Sep 21, 2017
Christopher Marcisz‘Amid the Freed Trees’John Ashbery, Kenneth Koch, and the ‘New York School of Poets’Sep 5, 2017Sep 5, 2017
Christopher MarciszHelsinki’s Cable Factory turned Arts HubA walk through Kaapelitehdas, the enormous arts and cultural space in a former Nokia factory just outside the center of the Finnish…Aug 24, 2017Aug 24, 2017
Christopher MarciszPicasso’s Cast of Characters at the ClarkSpanning six busy decades, this summer’s exhibit at the Clark Art Institute focuses on the artist’s loves, dramas, and collaboratorsJun 16, 2017Jun 16, 2017
Christopher MarciszThe Odd Couple of Art: Andy Warhol and Norman Rockwell at NRMThis summer the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge considers two ‘heavyweight image-makers of the 20th century’Jun 11, 2017Jun 11, 2017